Word: summing
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...defeated G. H. Damon '34 (Low), 3-1; T. W. Thorndike '35 (Lev) won by default; L. O. Dawes '35 (Lev) defeated R. C. Wells '35 (Low), 3-0; J. C. Frame 4G (Low) defeated I. M. Street '35 (Lev), 3-1. Kirkland 5, Winthrop 0. This sum mary...
...Ohio Gang." As the liquidated assets of American Metals Co., seized during the War, he paid $6,453,979 to a German capitalist named Richard Merton representing a Swiss concern. As his "fee" Merton turned $441,000 in Liberty Bonds over to G. O. Politicians. Of this sum $50,000 was traced to Miller who claimed he received it as payment of a debt the party owed him. Other amounts went to Jesse Smith. Attorney General Harry Daugherty's henchman, and to Connecticut's late Boss John T. King. The Government put Miller and Daugherty on trial...
...trouble which can be caused by legacies with strings attached to them is illustrated rather more amusingly than usual in last night's Transcript. The inspiration for the article in question is the state of affairs in Widener Library. Here, it appears, there is a considerable sum of money set aside for the purchase of books in French, dealing with the exact sciences, and nothing else. There are also funds for the acquisition of books on Siam, California, and for volumes once owned by Coleridge, and annotated by him. This money can not be spent for anything other than...
...constantly changing, and must be handled by persons familiar with the situation, not by the inflexible provisions of a will. Furthermore the dispensation of such funds is often a task beyond the ken of a layman. The man with a casual interest in a subject, desiring to leave a sum to the students of that subject, is not necessarily a good judge of the manner of expenditure. A sincere and equitable bequest, in short, should be drawn up in one of two ways: it should either have been gone over by an expert in the field to which...
...that is going further than American public opinion is yet prepared to accept," continued Chancellor Chamberlain, then Great Britain will enter negotiations on two conditions: 1) any settlement reached must be final; 2) whatever sum the Allies agree to pay in War Debts must be so small that it "will not involve a resumption of the [Allied] claim on Germany for Reparations, which it was the object of the Lausanne settlement last year to end." At Lausanne the Allies promised to forgive Germany all but 1? on $1 of her Reparations debt IF they were similarly forgiven their War Debts...